U.S. Industrial Production Rose 0.1% in February Despite Snow

Output at U.S. factories, mines, and utilities rose 0.1% in February, the eighth straight monthly output gain in industrial production, and one that was likely held down somewhat by the snowstorms that hit the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions, the U.S. Federal Reserve announced Monday.

Meanwhile, the factory utilization rate, also known as capacity utilization, rose to 72.7% in February from 72.5% in January and 71.8% in December. The capacity utilization rate is now 7.9 percentage points below its average for 1972-2008, the Fed said -- still lower than it should be, but nevertheless better than the level recorded in January.

The consensus opinion of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had been that industrial production would remain unchanged in February; it rose 0.9% in January and 0.5% in December. That same survey also predicted capacity utilization would dip to 72.4% in February.

Although manufacturing accounts for less than 20% of U.S. GDP, it accounts for a considerable portion of the nation's cyclical growth. Continual declines in production point to a softening economy; rising, the reverse. A low capacity utilization rate usually reflects softer demand; a high rate, strong demand, with the potential for increased inflation.

February's industrial production data reveals a factory sector that's still humming along. Demand is solid, and while inventory rebuilding has contributed to the sector's rebound. But a demand trend this long (eight months) can not be attributed to inventory replenishing alone: It points to increasing commercial activity, with factories responding to the demand by increasing output. When viewed in combination with the Monday's report of a rising the Empire State Manufacturing Index, the picture this industrial production report paints is one of a factory sector that's gaining steam -- a bullish sign for U.S. GDP and corporate revenue and earnings.